ebook img

Personified Goddesses: An archetypal pattern of female protagonists in the works of two black ... PDF

186 Pages·2015·7.95 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Personified Goddesses: An archetypal pattern of female protagonists in the works of two black ...

Atlanta University Center DigitalCommons@Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center ETD Collection for AUC Robert W. Woodruff Library 7-1-2013 Personified Goddesses: An archetypal pattern of female protagonists in the works of two black women writers Anthonia Adadevoh Clark Atlanta University Follow this and additional works at:http://digitalcommons.auctr.edu/dissertations Part of theLiterature in English, North America, Ethnic and Cultural Minority Commons Recommended Citation Adadevoh, Anthonia, "Personified Goddesses: An archetypal pattern of female protagonists in the works of two black women writers" (2013).ETD Collection for AUC Robert W. Woodruff Library.Paper 763. This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center. It has been accepted for inclusion in ETD Collection for AUC Robert W. Woodruff Library by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center. For more information, please [email protected]. ABSTRACT DOCTOR OF ARTS IN HUMANITIES ADADEVOH, ANTHONIA O. B.A. MISSISSIPPI COLLEGE, 1980 M.A. JACKSON STATE UNIVERSITY, 1982 M.F.A. SPALDING UNIVERSITY, 2011 PERSONIFIED GODDESSES: AN ARCHETYPAL PATTERN OF FEMALE PROTAGONISTS IN THE WORKS OF TWO BLACK WOMEN WRITERS Committee Chair: Viktor Osinubi, Ph.D. Dissertation dated July 2013 This dissertation investigates the works oftwo Black female writers: FloraNwapa (African and Nigerian) and ZoraNeale Hurston (African American). Although they come from different geographical regions, both writers use the same archetypal patterns to create strong female protagonists. By characterizing protagonists in their novels from an African religious cultural perspective, both authors dismantle the stereotypical images ofhow black women are typically portrayed in fiction. Using Jung's theory ofthe collective unconscious and archetypal criticism the study finds that both authors create black female protagonists who are wise, resilient, decisive, courageous, independent, and risk-taking; the women who, through their self-discoveryjourneys, are neither defined by nor in oppositional relationships with the males in their lives. The study compares how the qualities oftwo archetypal goddesses, Uhamiri of the Igbo cosmology and Oya ofthe Yoruba cosmology, are personified through the personalities ofthe two female protagonists in Nwapa's Efuru and Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God, respectively. Using strong mythical females as templates, this research explores the ways in which the authors have defined their female characters, thus providing an alternative strategy for defining and analyzing black female characters in fiction. The study asserts that literary interpretation ofAfricana women should include the cultural realities associated with the African religious framework in order to capture the full essence oftheir humanity. In addition, African feminist thought, unlike Western feminist theory, provides a more realistic model ofdiscourse on Africana women's self- identity. Examining Africana women from these perspectives, as opposed to analyzing them based on European standards, is an effective method ofdiscrediting stereotypical images that continue to plague the portrayal ofblack women in fiction. When black women in fiction are explored from this vantage point, the literary work sends a message ofcultural authenticity and preservation that elevates Africana women, expanding their functions and positions in society beyond traditional roles. PERSONIFIED GODDESSES: AN ARCHETYPAL PATTERN OF FEMALE PROTAGONISTS IN THE WORKS OF TWO BLACK WOMEN WRITERS A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF CLARK ATLANTA UNIVERSITY IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF ARTS IN HUMANITIES BY ANTHONIA ADADEVOH DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH ATLANTA, GEORGIA JULY 2013 ©2013 ANTHONIA ADADEVOH All Rights Reserved ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Fortheir patience, guidance and support during the writing ofthis manuscript, I am deeply grateful to my committee members, Dr. Viktor Osinubi (chair), Dr. Susan Wright, and Dr. Timothy Askew. My gratitude also goes to my husband, Vidal for his relentless support, my children Morenike, Folake, Akindayo and my son-in-law, Rich, and my grandson, Kaiyo. TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS vi STATEMENT OF UNDERSTANDING vii NOTICE TO USERS ACCESSING THIS WORK viii CHAPTER CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION 1 CHAPTER TWO: THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVE 22 CHAPTER THREE: EFURU: THE FIGURATIVE MOTHER ARCHETYPE 63 CHAPTER FOUR: JANIE IN THEIR EYES WERE WATCHING GOD: THE PERSONIFIED GODDESS. 102 CHAPTER FIVE: NWAPA AND HURSTON: A COMPARATIVE VIEW 140 CHAPTER SIX: CONCLUSION 154 WORKS CITED 159 CHAPTER ONE INTRODUCTION Black women in fiction are generally portrayed as either emasculating, tongue- lashing matriarchs or as docile, oppressed, and submissive women. These stereotypical images are inextricably tied to female oppositional identities entrenched in a dichotomy with the male gender. In this oppositional context, black women are characterized from the vantage point ofeithertheir helplessness ortheir power-rending ability to weaken men in patriarchal settings. Some black women writers, however, are dismantling these stereotypes by constructing the heroines oftheir novels with more positive, multidimensional qualities. Flora Nwapa and ZoraNeale Hurston, for example, construct the protagonists of their novels based on an African religious cultural perspective. Against this backdrop, they portray their protagonists as being wise, resilient, decisive, and independent; through their self-discoveryjourneys, the female characters develop non-oppositional relationships with the males in their lives. AlthoughNwapa (Nigerian) and Hurston (African American) represent different literary periods and come from different geographical locations, both adopt an archetypal pattern ofpersonified African goddesses to characterize their protagonists as strong Africana women. In Efuru, Nwapa personifies Uhamiri, a goddess ofthe Igbo cosmology, through the novel's eponymous protagonist, Efuru. In Their Eyes Were Watching God, Hurston personifies Oya ofthe Yoruba cosmology to create a feisty female protagonist in Janie. 1 2 The purpose ofthis study is to show that Nwapa and Hurston use the same archetypal pattern to create strong Africana female protagonists who, through their self- discoveryjourneys, evolve into strong women who are neither defined by nor in oppositional relationships with the males in their lives. Although both writers come from differentparts ofthe world, they show interesting similarities that clearly relate to their African heritage. That two writers from different geographical regions use the same archetypal pattern to develop the heroines oftheir novels suggests that they have something else in common besides their common human experience. Along this line ofthought, nineteenth-century diffusionist scholars who researchthe history ofculture and who have had some influence on the study ofAfrican oral literature believe that iftales from two societies show similar elements and common patterns, then such similarities occur only because the two societies had contact with one another in the distant past, which resulted inthe borrowing ofcultural ideas. Borrowing cultural ideas might be true for some societies, but this theory does not hold for Africans and African Americans because both had the same culture before the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade. Therefore, although both writers were historically forced to detach themselves from their ancestral culture, their distinctive use ofAfrican female goddesses as literary archetypes suggests that they had an awareness ofAfrican cultural and religious paradigms. Using Swiss psychologist Carl Jung's theory ofthe collective unconscious, this study suggests that the African religious culture was initially in the authors' unconscious before manifesting itselfin the conscious. This study acknowledges the theory ofthe collective unconscious residing in all human beings. Bound only by historical connections, two authors from different literary periods accessed knowledge ofthe same African religious culture from their collective unconscious to create fictional characters. By characterizing their protagonists as personified goddesses, both authors provide evidence ofthe manifestation ofthe collective unconscious to the conscious. The study employs archetypal criticism as the primary literary device to compare the personified goddesses, Efuru and Janie, the two female protagonists, with their corresponding figurative mother archetypes—Oya and Uhamiri, respectively. Archetypal criticism determines both the form and the function ofthe text and adds greater depth and understanding to the literary works. Nwapa and Hurston create their protagonists based on the mythos ofthe African goddesses, Uhamiri ofthe Igbo cosmology and Oya ofthe Yoruba cosmology, similarto the Jungian mother archetype. To validate this claim, the personality qualities ofthe goddesses are compared with the corresponding traits expressed through Efuru and Janie. The literary interpretation ofselected works is based on the researched works ofauthors who have written on mythological stories ofthe goddesses, particularly Sabine Jell- Bahlsen's The Water Goddess in Igbo Cosmology: Oguide ofOguta Lake (Uhamiri) and Judith Gleason's Oya: In Praise ofanAfrican Goddess (Oya). The secondary source used to support this study includes African feminist theory, which posits a connection between the supernatural and the physical world. In addition, the study builds on the research ofthe Nobel Prize winner Wole Soyinka, the Nigerian playwright, critic, and theorist, whose work Myth, Literature andthe African Worldlays the foundation for the use ofAfrican deities in the construction ofliterary characters. The research work ofHenry Gates, the African American critic and theorist, also

Description:
personalities of the two female protagonists in Nwapa's Efuru and Hurston's Their Flora Nwapa and Zora Neale Hurston, for example, construct the
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.